From Aesthetics to Art Criticism and Back

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From Aesthetics to Art Criticism and Back Arthur C. Danto The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism, Vol. 54, No. 2. (Spring, 1996), pp. 105-115. Stable URL: http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0021-8529%28199621%2954%3A2%3C105%3AFATACA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-6 The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism is currently published by The American Society for Aesthetics.

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ARTHUR C . DANTO

From Aesthetics To Art Criticism and Back

The powerful distinction drawn in the great originating works of philosophical aesthetics, between aesthetic and practical judgments, has tended to define the default state of the discipline in such a way as to stultify, by stipulation, the propensity to ask what practical utility aesthetic experience might have. For questions of practicality are defined by the interests an individual or group might have, but, articulating what might be thought of as The First Dogma of Aesthetics, Kant writes that "Taste is the faculty of judging of an object or a method of representing it by an entirely disinterested satisfaction or dissatisfaction. The object of such satisfaction is called beautiful."' A spark plug might be considered a beautiful object, with its knurled and polished surfaces and its exquisitely proportioned distribution of metal and ceramic parts, but it would, so far as beautiful, satisfy no interest whatever: if you were anxious to have one which worked, issues of spark plug beauty would be beside the point, for to judge it beautiful would be as an "object of an entirely disinterested satisfaction," since "Every interest spoils the judgment of taste."2 And the puzzling question would certainly be: what kind of satisfaction could that be? For what would constitute satisfaction if there were no interest to be served? Let us follow Kant in speaking as if there were a kind of satisfaction an sich, a distant ontological relative of the thing an sich. It is a family trait of the an sich tribe that its members are unhedingt, or not condition bound. It immediately follows, of course, that aesthetic considerations are extruded from the realm of function and utility, a momentous consequence which has been taken to justify the elimination of ornament and decoration from the domain of architectural design and the elimination of art

subsidies from the federal budget as frill by definition, so far as artworks fall under the category of the aesthetic. No distinction is especially drawn between natural and artistic beauty in Kant: "Nature is beautiful because it looks like art, and art can only be called beautiful if we are conscious of it as art while yet it looks like nature.""^ the judgment of beauty may be invariant as to whether it is beautiful art or natural beauty, and though we may be mistaken, in the event of illusion, as to whether or not it is art, we are not mistaken in point of its beauty-"Beautiful art ~ a patrician Philmust look like n a t ~ r e . "Thus adelphian wandered serendipitously into the Pennsylvania Academy of Art in 1877 and encountered a group of students drawing from the model. The life class was still something of a rarity in Philadelphia, so he supposed they were drawing a life-like statue-until it moved. "'My God,' he cried, 'She's alive!,' and he rushed from the room."5 His was an art-nature mistake, but not a mistake in point of beauty. The philosophical value of illusion, as always, is to identify something invariant between representation and reality, as in the case of statues and live models, but there may be beautiful works of art which have no obvious counterpart in nature because they are not themselves representations. Were one to display .a spark plug because of its beauty, it might be a representation, not in the sense of an imitation but in that of an example, a case of representation made central by Nelson Goodman. On the other hand, the one who displayed the spark plug may or may not have intended that its representativeness be considered salient in our experience of it: that would be an open question of interpretation; whether, for example, the displayer meant tacitly to assert that

The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 54:2 Spring 1996

The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism spark plugs are beautiful or, in the manner of Schopenhauer, who makes the notion of Platonic Forms central to his analysis, that The Spark Plug is beautiful. Abstract paintings might be a better example, for though any given abstraction is an example of the class of abstract paintings, no two members of that population need, by contrast with spark plugs as mass-produced, look alike: abstractions are alike only in their non-mimesis. So an abstract painting can be beautiful without there being a representation between which and the abstract painting an illusion is interestingly possible. A beautiful abstraction might thus be like any novel real object which happens to be beautiful: the beauty of a seashell is not the beauty of a human face, nor is the latter's beauty one with the beauty of a sunset. So our experience of art is also satisfying an sich and a path worn smooth by those who have taken the First Dogma as the final truth leads from theoretical aesthetics to one form of the practice of art criticism, construed as the discrimination of good art from bad, where nothing distinguishes, other than the knowledge that it is art one is experiencing, what Clement Greenberg identifies as "quality in art," from the beautiful in Nature.6 The qualification, "knowledge that it is art that one is experiencing," ought to sound a warning that if the beautiful is invariant to artworks and other things, beauty forms no part of the concept of art, though in Kant's time it would have been taken as a matter of course that artworks as a class aimed at beauty, and beauty was implied by their existence, even though they might fail in their aim. Once more consider the displayed spark plug. Spark plugs could not have existed in Kant's time, nor, contrary to historical fact, could they have been artworks if they had existed. They could not have existed because the state of industrial ceramics and of metallurgy was not evolved enough to have produced them, quite apart from the fact that the mechanism which gave rise to the spark plug-the internal combustion engine-had not as yet been thought of. But imagine, even so, that a spark plug slipped through a timewarp and was found by a woodcutter just outside Koenigsburg in 1790. It would be incapable of satisfying any interest at the time as the Zeugganz in which it could do so was not to be in place for a century and a half, so it would have value only as a cu-

riosity, like the coconuts that would, rarely, wash up on European shores in the sixteenth century, to be credited with magical attributes. The time-displaced spark plug might very well find a place in Frederick the Great's Wunderkammer, where it would be an object of contemplation which was forcibly disinterested since there was nothing other than contemplation one could do with it unless use it as a paperweight. It would almost exactly fit Kant's famous characterization of beauty as purposiveness without the representation of any specific p ~ r p o s eit: ~would perhaps look too useful to be ornamental, but no one could imagine how. In any case, it could not, given the state of art, be a work of art in 1790. Today, in order to treat it as an object of disinterested contemplation-as an aesthetic object-we would have to bracket our knowledge of what spark plugs do. Or we would explain how the beauty of the spark plug was the result of a very large number of technical discoveries and decisions, that it evolved into its present aesthetic condition in an almost Darwinian fashion through artifactual selection, with form following function. But how much of its aesthetics or for that matter of its evolutionary history would enter into its appreciation as a work of art, were it to become one on the model of a ready-made, is a matter of a very different order. The spark plug as an aesthetic object and the spark plug as an artwork would have very different properties, and it is not clear that the beauty of the spark plug is even relevant to its appreciation as an artwork. That would be ambiguous until it became interpreted, as in the parallel case of Duchamp's Fountain. Even members of Duchamp's immediate circle, like Walter Arensberg, thought Duchamp was drawing attention to the white gleaming beauty of the urinal: as if an artist whose philosophical agenda was in part to extrude the aesthetic from the artistic were bent upon reducing works of art to aesthetic objects, in the manner of Kant or Schopenhauer! There is an argument recorded between Arensberg and the artist George Bellows in 1917, in which the former said "A lovely form has been revealed, freed from its functional purpose, there a man has clearly made an aesthetic contribution."g But in 1962, Duchamp wrote to Hans Richter: "When I discovered readymades I thought to discourage aesthetics. ... I threw the bottle rack

Danto From Aesthetics To Art Criticism and Back and the urinal into their faces as a challenge, and now they admire them for their aesthetic beauty."g The foremost Kantian art critic of our time, Clement Greenberg, had little use and less patience with Duchamp as an artist, and I want to discuss ~ r e e n b e r ~ achievement 's against the background of a distinction I regard as crucial between aesthetic objects and works of art. Kant, Greenberg conceded, had bad taste and scant experience with art-"yet his capacity for abstraction enabled him, despite many gaffes, to establish in his Critique of Aesthetic Judgment what is the most satisfactory basis for aesthetics we yet have."lO I am anxious to discuss Greenberg because his way of doing art criticism has become extremely problematic in an artworld almost defined by Duchamp as its generative thinker. Greenberg's aesthetic philosophy is being carried forward by Hilton Kramer and the writers of his periodical, The New Criterion, and it pivots precisely on the issue of "quality in art" which Kramer identifies specifically with aesthetic quality but which Duchamp and his folI must count &elf among lowers-and them-would identify in some other way. I am uncertain that one can come up with a sort of Unified Field Theory of Artistic Goodness, or hence whether one can explain the artistic goodness of works Greenberg prized for their aesthetic goodness in some other terms. But I at least know that it is bad critical practice to dismiss works which lack aesthetic goodness in Greenberg's terms as artistically bad. If a Unified Theory is not to be had, art criticism is a very divided practice. Whether in addition it needs to be an essentially conflicted practice remains to be decided, and perhaps a close examination of the way g re en berg sought to ground his own critical practice in Kantian aesthetics will facilitate that decision. But the existence of that conflict gives us a reason to examine the background in aesthetic theory from which it arises: a theory which entails a conflict in application must be itself a conflicted theory, jusi as a set of axioms is inconsistent if it entails a contradiction. The conflict was screened by the historical accident that aesthetics was hammered out as a discipline at a time when art had been singularly stable in its practice and conception over several centuries, and where such revolutions in art as there may have been were in the

107 nature of reversions to earlier conditions-from rococo to neoclassicism in the time of Kant, and from romanticism to Pre-Raphaelitism in the time of Schopenhauer. ~ o d e r n i s mbegan insidiously in the 1880s, but it did not as such especially force aestheticians to rethink their distinctions, which fit fairly readily with Ckzanne and Kandinsky and could even, as we saw, be made to fit with Duchamp. Aesthetics seems decreasingly adequate to deal with art after the 1960s-with "art after the end of art" as I have elsewhere termed it-a sign of which was an initial disposition to refuse to consider non- or anti-aesthetic art as art at all. That paralleled the reflex which consisted in regardini abstract art as not art at all, which Greenberg, as an advocate of abstraction, had to deal with. That momentary crisis was overcome by revising the theory that art must be mimetic, a felicitous move which classical aesthetics facilitated precisely through the weak distinction it insisted upon between artistic and natural beauty, leaving it now open that all that mattered was aesthetic quality. But classical aesthetic theory could not be appealed to with "art after the end of art" precisely because it seemed to scorn aesthetic quality altogether: it was precisely in terms of classical aesthetics that the refusal to call it art was grounded. Once its status as art was established, it was fairly clear that aesthetics as a theory was badly in need of repair if it was to be helpful at all in dealing with this art. And in my view that was going to mean overhauling the distinction between the aesthetic and the practical as the default basis of the discipline. But let us return to an aesthetics-based art criticism, and the views of Clement Greenberg. Greenberg derived two tenets from his reading of Kant. The first was based on a famous formulation of the relationship between the judgment of beauty and the application of rules. "The concept of beautiful art does not permit the judgment upon the beauty of a product to be derived from any rule which has a concept as its determining ground, and therefore has as its basis a concept of the way in which the product is possible. Therefore beautiful art cannot itself devise the rule according to which it can bring about its product."ll Critical judgment, in Greenberg's view, operates in the abeyance of rule: "Quality in art can be neither ascertained nor proved by logic or discourse. Experience

The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism alone rules in this area-and the experience, so to speak, of experience. This is what all the serious philosophers of art since Immanuel Kant have concluded."l* So "the most satisfactory basis for aesthetics we yet have" was nothing less than the most satisfactory basis for art criticism as Greenberg believed himself to practice it. Greenberg credited himself with good taste, a matter in part of temperament and in part of experience. "The practiced eye tends always toward the definitely and positively good in art, knows it there, and will remain dissatisfied with anything e l s e . " l V i l l , in brief, be dissatisfied with anything less that the satisfying an sich. The Kantian art critic, pressed for an answer to the question of what good is art-what art is good for-has to deflect the question as reflecting a philosophical misunderstanding. "What does practicality have to do with art?" is the rhetorical retort of those persuaded that art exists for aesthetic satisfaction alone: for satisfaction an sich. So the same logical gulf that separates the aesthetic from the practical separates art from anything useful. And Kantian aesthetics has served the contemporary conservative art critic well in setting aside as irrelevant to art any instrumental ambitions artists might have of putting art to work in the service of this human interest or that, and most particularly political interests. "What has art got to do with politics?" the conservative critic asks, as if the question were rhetorical and the answer-"Nothing!"-a foregone certitude. Greenberg's second Kantian tenet derives from the deep reason in Kant's system why the aesthetic was strictly segregated from the practical. It was because the judgment of beauty had to be tacitly universal, and universality would be incompatible with interest, and hence with practicality. "In all judgments by which we describe anything as beautiful, we allow no one to be of another opinion," Kant writes, not as a prediction that "everyone will agree with my judgment, but that he ought."14 Kant invokes a special notion of what he terms "subjective universality" which bases itself on the postulation of a certain kind of sensus cornrnunis which in turn allows a certain parity of form between moral and aesthetic judgments in his system. Greenberg derived from the tacit universality of aesthetic judgments the thesis that art is all of a piece. He was particularly anxious to demonstrate that there is no difference in our aesthetic

experience of abstract as against representational art. Remember, he was writing at a time when critics were enough uncertain of abstract painting that they were prepared to argue that experiencing it was different in kind from experiencing representational art. In 1961, he wrote: Experience itself-and experience is the only court of appeal in art [from tenet I !]-has shown that there is both bad and good in abstract art. And it has also revealed that the good in one kind of art is always, at bottom, more like the good in all other kinds of art than it is like the bad in its own kind. Underneath all apparent differences, a good Mondrian or good Pollock has more in common with a good Vermeer than a bad Dali has. [There were no good Dalis for Greenberg.] A bad Dali has far more in common, not only with a bad Maxfield Parrish, but with a bad abstract painting.

And Greenberg goes on to say that people who do not make the effort to experience or appreciate abstract art "do not have the right to pronounce on any kind of art-much less abstract art." They do not "because they have not taken the trouble to amass sufficient experience of it, and it makes no difference in this respect how much experience they have in other fields of art."16 To be seriously interested in art, we might paraphrase Greenberg as saying, is to be seriously interested in the good in art. "One is not for Chinese, or Western, or representational art as a whole, but only for what is good in it."" And Greenberg's second tenet entailed that "the practiced eye" can pick out the good from the bad in art of whatever sort, independently of any specific knowledge of the circumstances of production in the tradition to which the art belongs. The owner of the practiced eye is aesthetically everywhere at home. Recently a wellknown curator boasted that without knowing anything about African art, he could, by means of his good eye alone, distinguish the good, the better, and the best. And so doubtless he could-from the perspective of the Museum of Modern Art. It is a matter of some debate to what degree this perspective has to do with the African's concept of good, better, and best. Greenberg's strengths and weaknesses as a critic derived from these tenets. It was, for example, his confidence that the good in art is everywhere and always the same that underlay

Danto From Aesthetics To Art Criticism and Back his openness to goodness to which others at the time were largely blind that explains his early identification of Jackson Pollock as a great painter. Little in the way in which abstract painting was produced in the 1940s would have prepared one for Pollock's work, and the ability to sense its artistic goodness-even to proclaim its artistic greatness-at a time when this was far indeed from the received view, gave Greenberg in retrospect credentials of a kind few other critics enjoyed. It also came to constitute a criterion for goodness as a critic that one make discoveries of a parallel sort, which has inevitably had certain pernicious consequences in subsequent critical practice: the critic is supposed to make discoveries in order to validate his or her "practiced eye," and this has defined for the critic a role of champion for one or another artist; one's stature as a critic rises and falls with the reputation of the artist on whose goodness one has staked one's critical reputation. The critic in search of credentials stalks the unknown or the underrecognized, which in part gives hope to the marginal gallery, the fresh talent, the venturesome dealer, and keeps the productive system from rigidification. The reverse of this has been the confession of an insufficiently good eye when the artist a critic opposes turns out after all to have been good or even great. Often, of course, this can be accounted for along the same lines Greenberg adduces in connection with the resistance to abstract art, where it can be argued that the stubborn critic-the terrible John Canaday of The New York Times is a case in point, though not mentioned in The Collected Essays-will not open his eyes because of some a priori theory of what art has to be, for example, that it has to be representational. What Greenberg designates as "the opponents of abstract art" will argue that the experience of abstract art is not artistic experience "and that works of abstract art cannot be classified as art, properly speaking."l8 And one feels that clearly it must have been certain prior definitions of art which prevented those hostile to impressionism from seeing the goodness of those canvases, or which made it impossible to see the goodness of postimpressionist painting because the drawing was eccentric or the colors arbitrary. The implication is that if people would but open their eyes and, equally important, open their minds by allowing the mind to take its cue from what the

109 practiced eye delivers to it, there will be, just as Kant suggests, no final disagreements. "[Qluality in art is not just a matter of private experience," Greenberg writes. "There is a consensus of taste. The best taste is that of the people who, in each generation, spend the most time and trouble on art, and this best taste has always turned out to be unanimous, within certain limits, in its verdicts."19 If each individual cultivates an open mind and, to use a favorite expression of his, bears down hard enough, there will be no ultimate major disagreements. The idea of an open mind, of an aesthetic hypothesis non fingo, and of trusting to sustained visual experience alone, is almost caricatured in Greenberg's mode of confronting a painting. At a memorial meeting a year after his death, the painter Jules Olitski-whom Greenberg in later years often celebrated as our finest painter-described the format of a studio visit from the critic. Greenberg would stand with his back to a new painting until it was in place, and then wheel abruptly around to let his practiced eye take it in without giving the mind a chance to interpose any prior theories, as if there were a race between the transmission of visual stimuli and the speed of thought. Or he would cover his eyes until-it was time to look. There are innumerable anecdotes of this sort regarding Greenberg, and it became something of a standard posture in studio and gallery. Thomas Hoving describes the setting for the two major acquisitions of his tenure as director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in just those terms-the portrait by Velasquez of Juan de Pereija, and the krater of Europhronios which came to be known as the Met's "million dollar pot," but which Hoving defended as the most beautiful artwork of his entire experience. In the former case, he refused to look at the painting until the lighting was just right, and then he commanded "Hit me!"20 and with the illumination of the work the eyes were flooded with preconceptualized beauty. He would not look at the pot until it had been carried out into the light of day. It was on the basis of this first glance that he made the decision to purchase these works, and while there is no doubt that Hoving needed to have the outcome of tests for authenticity of provenance in hand when he went before his board, it was the testimony of the practiced eye that finally counted for him.

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The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism Greenberg would say very little other than grunt a kind of approval or disapproval. In a late interview-indeed, in the final text of The Collected Essays and Criticism-Greenberg voices a corollary of the tenet regarding the authority of experience. Asked to state criteria for the difference between minor and major art, he stated that There are criteria, but they can't be put into wordsany more than the difference between good and bad in art can be put into words. Works of art move you to a greater or lesser extent, that's all. S o far, words have been futile in the matter. ... Nobody hands out prescriptions to art and artists. You just wait and see what happens-what the artist does.21

It is striking that critical response is seen by Greenberg as of a piece with artistic creation, which is just what we would expect from his suspiciousness toward rules, which was after all a position Kant worked out in connection with artistic genius, granting of course the difference between taste and genius: between what Kant calls "a judging and not a productive faculty." Greenberg's monosyllabic utterances-visceral responses put into words but words which were themselves visceral responses-were the critic's counterpart to the coming-from-the-guts of painterly gesture in the sort of art with which Greenberg must always be identified: abstract expressionism, though he deplored this as a label. Greenberg could hardly have achieved his tremendous reputation as a critic by grunts and grimaces. It is altogether instructive to read his review in November, 1943 of Jackson Pollock's first exhibition at Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This Century Gallery. Of course he had by then seen a certain amount of Pollock's work through studio visits which were perhaps very similar to those Jules Olitski described, movingly and comically, after his death. But in h i s review Greenberg gave reasons why Pollock's painting was good, even if the ascertainment of its goodness was a function of the eye. And, one might add, without taking a scrap away from any credit due him, a function of the fact that others whose taste he admired-Lee Krasner, Hans Hoffman, Piet Mondrian, Peggy Guggenheim herself-were unanimous in their admiration. In the end the task of the critic was to say what was good and what was not, based always on the deliverances of the eye as a kind of seventh

sense: a sense of the beautiful in art, knowing it was art. It is on just this basis that Hilton Kramer erects his commendations and condemnations today, but of course Kramer is by no means the only critic to do so. If we think of it as what I term response-based criticism, then the tradition is being carried forward by critics very much less dogmatic than Kramer or Greenberg-I am thinking of Peter Schjeldahl and Dave Hickey. Greenberg effectively stopped writing criticism in the late 1960s, and it is difficult not to suppose that he did so because his entire practice as a critic was unable to gain a relevant purchase on an artistic practice governed by the principle, articulated by the two most influential artistic thinkers of that era, Andy Warhol and Joseph Beuys, that anything can be an artwork, that there is no special way that artworks have to look, that everyone can be an artist-a thesis Warhol advanced in his painting-by-the-numbers paintings which look like what anyone can do. Greenberg, according to a recollection by William Phillips, was singularly egalitarianhe really thought that anyone could paint-and he spoke of how Greenberg tried to get him to paint until the fact that Phillips was unable to stand the smell of paint got in-the lesson's way. I have heard Greenberg's widow read from a moving but callow letter, written in his thirties, describing his own first effort at painting which he thought pretty marvelous: he wrote to his correspondent that painting was as natural to him as making love. But he was not an ontological egalitarian, and he would have dismissed the painting-by-the-numbers paintings of Warhol as inconsistent with the philosophy of art he had learned from Kant: they could be achieved by following rules, by putting red where the numbers said one should. Of course Warhol followed no particular rule in making the work, but it would have been altogether consistent with his impulses as an artist that he follow the rules in a paint-by-the-numbers kit and exhibit the result. He probably did not, but let us imagine that he copied some, and exhibited them. The eye, the practiced eye, could not especially tell, since the copy would look like the real thing (the real thing was a false painting) and would inherit whatever aesthetic qualities the latter had. And yet they would have very different artistic qualities. Warhol was making a

Danto From Aesthetics To Art Criticism and Back statement about anyone being able to be an artist. He was making a statement about painting having to be something that is torn from the artist's soul. The former trolley conductor in the senior citizen recreation center who paints by the numbers is simply moving step by stepfollowing the rules-to the achievement of a pretty picture. Warhol, had he read Kant, could have made a statement about the third Critique by means of the paint-by-the-numbers paintings. Pop art, or much of it, was based on the commercial art-on illustrations, labels, package design, posters. The commercial artists responsible for these colorful proclamatory images themselves had good eyes: de Kooning had been a sign painter, and it is difficult to suppose that in appropriating to the ends of fine art the special equipment of the sign painter, de Kooning did not similarly appropriate the eye that made him successful as a sign painter. An instructive case of the reverse of this was Watteau's appropriating the equipment and the eye that went into his fgtes galant when he executed, as what turned out to be his last work and indeed his masterpiece, a shop sign for his dealer, Gersaint, which actually did hang in front of the latter's gallery for a time, showing what it looked like inside. The Ensigne de Gersaint is an incidental counterexample to the First Dogma of Aesthetics inasmuch as it was intended to serve a practical use, and probably fit in with the conventions of the shop-signs of Paris in the eighteenth century perfectly. But my concern is only to suggest that each of these commercial efforts was selected by someone with a good eye who said, confronting the Campbell's Soup label or the Brillo box design-"That's it!" In making their facsimiles, the pop artists appropriated designs which had already passed an aesthetic test of some sort, which were selected because it was supposed they would catch the eye, or convey information about the product, or whatever. But what made pop art high art rather than commercial art had only incidentally to do with the aesthetic qualities that caused it to succeed as commercial art. The art criticism of pop art, which as a genre of art I always found intixicating, had nothing to do with what met the eye, since what met the eye only explained its interest and value as commercial art. And the eye alone could not account for the difference.

11 1 But this would have been true with so much of the art of the sixties and the seventies, and of the nineties as well-the eighties was a somewhat retrograde moment because of the reassertion of painting as the dominant mode of art-makingthat the Kantian art critic would have been reduced to silence or to sputter in the face of the slashed felt, the shattered glass, the lead ingots, the latex soaked cheesecloth, the split houses, the chocolate smeared breasts, with which artistic statements were made in those years and since. Consider an important work of this era, Robert Morris's Box with the Sound of its own Construction of 1961. It is a wooden cube of not especially distinguished carpentry inside of which there is a tape on which the artist recorded the hammering and sawing noises which went into the manufacture of the box. It is like the box's memory of its own coming into being, and it has at the very least a comment to make on the mind-body problem. Greenberg had no way to deal with this work. In 1969, he wrote with an almost breathtaking obtuseness: Art in any medium, boiled down to what it does in the experiencing of it, creates itself through relations, proportions. The quality of art depends on inspired, felt relations or proportions as on nothing else. There is no getting around this. A simple unadorned box can succeed as art by virtue of these things; and when it fails as art it is not because it is a plain box, but because its proportions, or even its size, are uninspired, unfelt. The same applies to works in any form of "novelty" art ... . No amount of phenomenal, describable newness avails when the internal relations of the work have not been felt, inspired, discovered. The superior work of art, whether it dances, radiates, explodes, or barely manages to be visible (or audible or decipherable), exhibits, in other words, "rightness of form."22

"To this extent," Greenberg goes on to say, "art remains unchangeable. ... it will never be able to take effect as art except through q ~ a l i t y . " ~ 3 Morris's work is brilliant and inspired, and certainly has "quality" as a work of art-but hardly quality as defined by "rightness of form." Greenberg felt that the art of the sixties was, beneath surface appearances, singularly homogeneous and even monotonous. He even ventured to identify the common underlying style as what "Wolfflin would call linear."24 His tone in this

The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism late essay is biting, sarcastic, dismissive. It was the kind of response we recognize whenever a revolutionary moment has occurred in art-that the artists are out to shock, have forgotten how to draw, are behaving like very bad boys and girls. Whether it is to his credit or not, he did not change his mind for the last thirty years of his life. I heard him say these very things in 1992. Art had gone through a revolutionary moment, one which invalidated forever the supposedly easy transit from aesthetics to art criticism. They could only be connected by revising aesthetics as a discipline through the changes in critical practice that the revolution of the sixties imposed. I want now to say something about Greenberg's second Kantian tenet, which led criticism into much the same kind of hot water as the First Tenet did, although this did not become quite as apparent until some years later. This tenet asserts the "unchangeableness of art," which Greenberg affirmed somewhat slangily in an interview in 1969. He wanted to concede that American taste had matured over the years, "which is not the same thing as saying that there's been progress in art itself as distinct from taste. There certainly hasn't. Art hasn't gotten better or more 'mature' over the past 5,000, 10,000, or 20,000 years." So taste has a developmental history, but art has not. Greenberg in fact argued that there has been a "broadening of taste in our time, in the West," and this he believed is "owed in a certain large part to the effect of modernist art."25 His thought was that the ability to appreciate modernist painting made it easier for us to appreciate traditional art or art from other cultures. That is because, with representational art, we are likely to be distracted into thinking about what it shows by contrast, to put it ideologically, with what it is It's harder, I think, for a beginner to develop his taste with representational than with abstract art, all other things being equal. Abstract art is a wonderful way in which to learn to see art in general. You appreciate the Old Masters all the more once you can tell a good Mondrian or a good Pollock from a bad one.26 This, as I have often said, has the tendency to transform all museums into Museums of Modern Art, with everything to be appreciated in terms of the one thing art everywhere and al-

ways has, and which the eye trained on modernist painting learns how to identify and to grade. All artists are contemporaries, insofar as they are artists. They are noncontemporaries on matters irrelevant to art. This philosophy led to a number of heavily criticized exhibitions in the 1980s, preeminently the 1984 show at the Museum of Modern Art titled "Primitivism and Modern Art" which was based upon optically discernible "affinities" between Oceanic and African works, and their formally resembling counterparts in the modern movement. As an historical explanatory thesis, this is perhaps unexceptionable, true when it is true, false when it is false. Modern artists really have been influenced by primitive art. But affinities are different from explanatory considerations. They imply that the African or the Oceanic artist was driven by the same kind of formal considerations as the ~nodernists.And this was felt to reek of what we might call cultural colonialism. Multiculturalism was on the ascendant in 1984, and was to overtake the artworld, in America at least, in epidemic proportions through the nineties. The best one could hope to do was to endeavor to understand how those within a given cultural tradition appreciated their art. One could not, from outside that tradition, appreciate it as it was appreciated within, but one could at least attempt not to impose one's own mode of appreciation on traditions to which it was alien. This relativization was extended to the art of women, blacks, and minority artists even within our own culture. Small wonder that Greenberg was villainized in the artworld of the late eighties and the nineties! It was he who was to blame for such shows as the baleful "Primitivism and Modern Art!" Kantian universalism was replaced with an unforgiving sort of relativism and, it goes without saying, the concept of quality became odious and chauvinist. Art criticism became a form of cultural criticism, chiefly of one's own culture. In candor, I am no happier, as an art critic, with this than I was with Greenberg, and it would be altogether wonderful if one could turn to aesthetics as a discipline for guidance out of the chaos. If aesthetics could clarify the condition of criticism, the question of its practicality would be spectacularly established. I agree with Greenberg to this extent: there is a criterion of quality for works such as Warhol's by-the-num-

Danto From Aesthetics To Art Criticism and Back ber paintings and for Robert Morris's chatterbox, and if we worked out the art criticism for these objects, we would be in a better position to appreciate the good and bad in modern works like paintings by Mondrian and Pollock, as well as in the Old Masters. A general theory of quality might then contain aesthetic goodness not as a defining trait but as a special case. For I hope I have shown that aesthetic goodness will not help with art after the end of art. As an essentialist in philosophy I am committed to the view that art is always the same-that there are conditions necessary and sufficient for something to be an artwork invariantly as to time and place. But as an historicist I am committed to the view that what is a work of art at one time cannot be one at another, and in particular that there is a history, enacted through the history of art, in which the essence of artthe necessary and sufficient conditions-are painfully brought to consciousness. Enormous amounts of the world's artworks were made in times and places occupied by people who had no concept of art to speak of, for reasons wholly of what they took their interests to be: cave paintings, fetishes, altarpieces. It is true that today we have little relationship to these objects other than contemplative, since the interests are not our own and the beliefs in the light of which they were regarded as effective can no longer be widely held, least of all among those who admire the works in question. It would be a mistake to suppose that this contemplation belongs to their essence as artworks for it is almost certainly true that those who made them had little interest in their contemplation. But in any case the makeshift notions of satisfaction an sich, or Schopenhauer's will-less perception, have roughly the conceptual finesse as definitions of the aesthetic that "featherless biped" possesses as a definition of human being. How often one finds oneself staring out a window for no reason to speak of, or turning a mustard pot idly in one's hand like a Fran~oise Sagan heroine, where no interest is engaged or furthered: one is simply killing time. The mystic's posture of contemplation, which stills the mind, has no special rapport with the aesthetic. There is, just possibly, a universal aesthetic notion, which had for a time-fatefully the time when the originary works of aesthetic philosophy were framed-a certain application to

113 works of art, so that for that time the work of art was an intersection of crossed universals-the universal which belongs to art by essentialist considerations, and the universal aesthetic which belongs to human, perhaps to animal sensibility through being coded for in the genome. About this I will say a few reckless words. I have lately been struck by some empirical work in psychology which strongly supports the thesis that there are perceptions of beauty which cut across cultural lines. A 1994 study in Nature reported that both British and Japanese men and women ranked women's faces in order of attractiveness when certain features like large eyes, high cheekbones, and a narrow jaw were exaggerated. Caucasians, moreover, ranked Japanese women's faces the same way Japanese themselves did, and the authors of the article claim that there are "greater similarities than differences in cross-cultural judgments of facial att r a c t i ~ e n e s s . "The ~ ~ faces used were achieved by the computer, and the most attractive faces exaggerated certain traits in such a way as to give empirical support to a thesis of Schopenhauer that the visual arts yield "Platonic" ideas of the beauty found in actual persons. The features in question are exaggerations in much the same way that the tails of peacocks are exaggerations, but they are, in a commentary on the study, said to imply certain highly desirable traits in their owners, perhaps in the same way the tremendous feather display of the peacock does: to such traits as resistance to disease, fertility, and And again Schopenhauer has something right when he refers to "the marvelous sense of beauty" of the Greeks, which enabled them alone of all nations to set up for the imitation of all nations the standards of beauty and grace; and we can say that that which, if it remains unseparated from the will, gives sexual impulse, with its discriminating selection, i.e., sexual love ... becomes the objective sense ofbeauty for the human form, when, by reason of the presence of an abnormally preponderating intellect, it detaches itself from the will, and yet remains active.29

And needless to add, we have the natural myth of the sculptor who creates a statue of a woman he would fall in love with if she were real, giving vividness to Kant's idea that natural and artistic beauty are one.

The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism This, as I suggested, at a certain level of abstractness cuts across not only cultural lines but also lines of species. Evolutionary biologists have lately begun to associate symmetry with sexual desirability in a wide variety of species.30 The female scorpion fly shows invariant preference for males with symmetrical wings. The female barn swallow prefers a male with symmetrical wishbone pattern of feathers the same size and color on both sides of the tail. Asymmetrical antlers will cut the male who has them out of the mating game. Symmetry is perhaps a sign that the male has an immune system resistance to certain parasites which are known to cause uneven growth. This is a growing field of experimentation, but it suggests, there being nothing more "practical" than sex, that dear old natural selection accounts for aesthetic preferences which the clever Greeks introduced into their art where, even when the will was out of play because we know them to be statuary, we would enjoy looking at them with the same prurient eyes we cast on one another. You may not be able to "put it all into words." But you can go a long way in that direction from the perspectives of evolutionary biology. The principles of good design are the same as the outward emblems of health and fertility. Of course there are complicating factors with human beings. A human male with a disfigurement parallel to the elk with asymmetrical antlers can procure a sexual partner with high cheekbones and a narrow jaw if he happens to have pots of money, a mismatch due to cultural mischievousness which gives rise to the basic situation of comedy. And everyone in the world can specify the physical attributes of the attractive male who makes up the third figure in the eternal triangle. But now that we know that chimpanzees are carnivores, we also have discovered that an ill-favored male with a haunch of monkey-meat to share can secure the sexual favors of the classiest female in the clan. Schopenhauer denies that symmetry is a necessary condition of beauty, offering as counterexample the case of ruins.31 One does not idly offer counterexamples: the thesis of symmetry and beauty had to have been in the air, and the move from symmetry to ruin marks the transition in the history of taste from neoclassicism to romanticism. There are ruins and ruins, of course, some more beautiful than others, but it seems to me that with them we more or less

leave the sphere in which sexual response is triggered, and enter the sphere of meaning. We leave, in Hegel's terms, the sphere of natural beauty for the beauty of art and of what he termed spirit. The ruin connotes the relentlessness of time, the decay of power, the inevitability of death. The ruin is a romantic poem in the medium of dilapidated stone. The ruin is like the cherry tree in bloom when we visit the cherry trees to see the bloom, and think of the transiency of the features which give us a leg up in the evolutionary olympics; the fragility of beauty, the passage of time: we think, like Housman, of the springs that will not come again. Even if nobody made the blossoms, someone planted the trees, and, as Hegel puts it in speaking of the work of art, "it is essentially a question, an address to the responsive breast, a call to the mind and the spirit."32 And that is as true of Morris as of Warhol, of Pollock as of Mondrian, of Hals as of Vermeer. In the famous passage on the end of art, Hegel speaks of intellectual judgment of (the numbering is his) "(i) the content of art, and (ii) the work of art's means of presentation."" Criticism needs nothing further. It needs to identify meaning and mode of presentation, or what I term embodiment, on the thesis that artworks are embodied meanings. The mistake of Kantian art criticism is that it confuses form with content. Beauty is part of the content of the works it prized, and their mode of presentation asks us to respond to the meaning of beauty. All that can be put into words when one does art criticism. Putting all that into words is what art criticism is.34 ARTHUR C. DANTO Department of Philosophy Columbia University New York, New York 10027 1. Immanuel Kant, Critique o f Judnment, trans. J. M . Bernard (New York: ~ a f n e ;publishing Company, 1951), 85, u. 45. - 2: Kant, $13, p. 58. 3. Kant, $45, p. 149. 4. Ibid. 5. Harrison S. Morris, Confessions in Art (New York: Sears Publishing Co., 1930), p. 37; cited in David Sellin, The First Pose (New York: W. W. Norton, 1976), p. 56. 6. Clement Greenberg, "The Identity of Art," in Modernism with a Vengeance,1957-1 969, vol. 4 of The Collected

Danto From Aesthetics To Art Criticism and Back Essays and Criticism, ed. John O'Brian (University of Chicago Press, 1993), p. 118. 7. Kant, $17, p. 73. 8. Steven Watson, Strange Bedfellows: The First American Avant-Garde (New York; Abbeville Press, 1991), pp. 313314. 9. Duchamp, letter to Hans Richter, 1962, printed in Hans Richter, Dada: Art and Anti-Art (London: Thames and Hudson, 1966), pp. 207-208. 10. Greenberg, "Review of Piero della Francesca and The Arch of Constantine, both by Bernard Berenson," in Affirmations and Refusals, 1950-1956, vol. 3 of The Collected Essays and Criticism, p. 249. 11. Kant. $46, p. 150. 12. Greenberg, "The Identity of Art," p. 118. 13. Ibid., p. 120. 14. Kant, $22, p. 76. 15. Greenberg, "The Identity of Art," p. 118. 16. Ibid., p. 119. 17. Ibid., p. 118. 18. Ibid. 19. Ibid. 20. Thomas Hoving, Making the Mummies Dance: Inside the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993), p. 256. 21. Greenberg, "Interview Conducted by Lily Leino," in Modernism with a Vengeance, 1957-1969. p. 308.

115 22. Greenberg, "Avant-Garde Attitudes: New Art in the Sixties," in Modernism with a Vengeance, 1957-1969, p. 300. 23. Ibid., p. 301. 24. Ibid., p. 294. 25. Greenberg, "Interview," p. 309. 26. Ibid., p. 310. 27. D. I. Perrett, K. A. May, and S. Yoshikawa, "Facial Shape and Judgements of Female Attractiveness," Nature 368 (1994): 239-242; 241. 28. Nancy L. Etcoff, "Beauty and the Beholder," Nature 368 (1994): 186-187. 29. Arthur Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, trans. E . F. J. Payne (Indian Hills, Colorado: The Falcon's Wing Press, 1958), vol. 11, chap. xxxvi, p. 420. 30. See Paul J. Watson and Randy Thornhill, "Fluctuating Asymmetry and Sexual Selection," Tree 9 (1994): 21-25. 3 1. Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Representation, vol. I, $43, p. 216. 32. G. W. F. Hegel, Aesthetics: Lectures on Fine Art, trans. T. M. Knox. (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1975), vol. I, p. 71. 33. Ibid., p. 11. 34. A version of this paper was presented before the International Society for Aesthetics on August 1, 1995, at Lahti. Finland.